In re McBee

2006 NMSC 024, 134 P.3d 769, 139 N.M. 482
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 2006
DocketNo. 29,265
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2006 NMSC 024 (In re McBee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re McBee, 2006 NMSC 024, 134 P.3d 769, 139 N.M. 482 (N.M. 2006).

Opinion

FORMAL REPRIMAND AND OPINION

PER CURIAM.

{1} This matter has come before the Court twice following disciplinary proceedings in the Judicial Standards Commission concerning the Honorable William A. McBee (Respondent). After the Commission filed its first petition for discipline upon stipulation in this Court, we set the matter for oral argument. During oral argument, disputes arose regarding the findings of fact and conclusions of law issued by the Commission, which Respondent ostensibly stipulated to in a contemporaneously filed stipulation agreement and consent to discipline with the Commission. As a result, upon request of the Commission’s general counsel, we remanded this matter to the Commission for further proceedings.

{2} Upon remand, the Commission’s general counsel, who was the examiner assigned to prosecute the discijolinary charges against Respondent, filed a motion for order to show cause why Respondent should not be held in contempt of the Commission for his alleged intentional misrepresentation of material facts during the hearing before this Court. The Commission also amended its notice of formal proceedings against Respondent to add a second count alleging violation of Commission rules and the Code of Judicial Conduct based on the same conduct at issue in the contempt motion. Both the motion and the second count of the amended notice of formal proceedings remain pending before the Commission and are not before this Court at this time. Accordingly, we express no opinion on the merits of those pending proceedings.

{3} Although the proceedings against Respondent remain pending before the Commission, the Commission nevertheless filed with this Court a second petition for discipline upon stipulation, which included findings of fact and conclusions of law based on a second stipulation agreement and consent to discipline between the Commission and Respondent. The pertinent findings of fact are summarized below. Following a second hearing before this Court, we granted the stipulated petition and ordered the stipulated discipline against Respondent. Among other things, we ordered that Respondent receive a public reprimand, which we now issue in the form of this opinion.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

{4} These proceedings are the result of actions Respondent took in relation to a criminal proceeding filed in the Fifth Judicial District, where Respondent was at all times relevant to this matter, and is currently, a sitting district court judge. Specifically, the State of New Mexico filed a criminal information charging Tami Busch with two felony counts of trafficking cocaine and five felony counts of distribution of methamphetamine. The case was initially assigned to Judge Gary . L. Clingman, who was excused from the ease by Ms. Busch.

{5} The following day, Respondent was assigned the case. Respondent did not recuse himself from the case at that time. However, during the course of these proceedings Respondent stipulated “that he was aware that presiding over [Ms. Busch’s] case could give, at a minimum, the appearance to a reasonable person that Respondent was not impartial in that matter on the basis of his personal relationship with Max Proctor, boyfriend to, and attorney for, [Ms. Busch], who subsequently became [Ms. Busch’s] husband.”

{6} At the arraignment, Ms. Busch pled no contest to all seven felony counts filed against her. Her plea was accepted at that time but did not contain an agreement as to sentencing, and Respondent ordered a presentence report at the conclusion of the hearing. The report concluded that Ms. Busch “was a drug dealer” and should be “held accountable for her actions.” The pre-sentence report recommended sentencing Ms. Busch to 18 years for the cocaine charges and 15 years for the methamphetamine charges, to run consecutively for a total of 33 years. The report further recommended suspending all but 5 years, to be served in the Penitentiary of New Mexico, followed by 2 years mandatory parole.

{7} Upon review of the pre-sentence report and all factors surrounding the case, Respondent indicated at a sentencing hearing the following week that he would consider assigning Ms. Busch to participate in a new program, the Lea County Family Drug Court, in lieu of incarceration. However, Respondent continued the hearing to a future unspecified date because the Lea County Family Drug Court was not yet an available sentencing alternative for Ms. Busch.

{8} Approximately two months later, the chief judge for the Fifth Judicial District, the Honorable Jay Forbes, met with Respondent to discuss whether it would be proper for Respondent to preside over Ms. Busch’s ease because of the appearance of a personal bias. As the result of the meeting, they agreed that Respondent’s continued involvement in Ms. Busch’s case gave, at a minimum, the appearance that his integrity and impartiality was impaired. Respondent therefore recused from the case one week later.

{9} Following Respondent’s recusal, the case was reassigned to Judge William P. Lynch, who set the matter for sentencing. Prior to the sentencing hearing, Ms. Busch requested that the State be bound by Respondent’s comments during the previous sentencing hearing regarding family drug court. Specifically, Ms. Busch wanted to require Judge Lynch to order family drug court as a sentencing alternative for her. However, at the sentencing hearing, Judge Lynch indicated that he was not bound by Respondent’s consideration of family drug court. At that point, Ms. Busch requested to withdraw her plea to all charges, since she pled no contest believing she would avoid incarceration and be sentenced to family drug court. Judge Lynch indicated that he was not inclined to allow Ms. Busch to withdraw her plea because there was no official court record memorializing any agreement on sentencing associated with her no contest plea. Nevertheless, Judge Lynch continued the sentencing hearing to allow Ms. Busch time to file any motions she believed were necessary to support her position that she should be sentenced to family drug court.

{10} When the sentencing hearing resumed, Ms. Busch argued that Respondent had already sentenced her to family drug court, that Respondent had improperly recused himself from her case, and that her case was not properly assigned to Judge Lynch for sentencing purposes. Shortly after the sentencing hearing Judge Lynch recused himself from the case for procedural reasons and issued an order expressing concern that “Ms Busch [through her counsel] seemed unusually well-informed about matters outside the record in [her] case.” Specifically, Judge Lynch noted that:

Defendant Busch [through her counsel] told me that, if I recuse, Judge McBee will enter an order that will withdraw the recusal he filed as being improvidently ordered. Defendant Busch further told me that Judge McBee does not think he should have recused from this case. Perhaps there was no ex parte contact because the case was no longer pending before Judge McBee, or perhaps Judge McBee thought no party would gain a procedural or tactical advantage as a result of the communications. Because Assistant District Attorney Terry Haake told me that he was not privy to those conversations, the conversations raise questions [of propriety] in my mind.

{11} Consistent with what Judge Lynch noted in his order, Respondent subsequently revoked his recusal from Ms.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Victor Marshall (I)
528 P.3d 653 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2023)
In Re Marshall
New Mexico Supreme Court, 2023
Inquiry Concerning a Judge No. 2009-081
2011 NMSC 019 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2011)
In Re Schwartz
255 P.3d 299 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2011)
In the Matter of Garza
2007 NMSC 028 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 NMSC 024, 134 P.3d 769, 139 N.M. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mcbee-nm-2006.